Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Doug Ross
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Character biography== Doug Ross was raised by his mother, Sarah, after his father, Ray, abandoned their family. In Season 1, Ross revealed to a patient that he had a son, and he tells nurse [[List of secondary nurses in ER#Wendy Goldman|Wendy Goldman]] that he doesn't know his son's name as he's never seen him. Not much else is known about Doug's past. Doug's estranged son was a large part of the reason that he became a pediatrician. In 2019, ''ER'' executive producer John Wells shared, "Part of the reason why he wanted to become a pediatrician and be around children and care for children is because of his guilt that he wasn't the person he wanted to be when he had a child as a young man. That was always meant to be part of who was, but we didn't want to turn it into a Hallmark movie."<ref>{{Cite web |date=April 2, 2019 |title=ER Boss Solves the Mystery of Doug Ross' MIA Son β and Details Why the Show Won't Get a Reboot |url=https://tvline.com/2019/04/02/er-doug-ross-son-mystery-explained-reboot/ |access-date=June 13, 2022 |website=TVLine}}</ref> Despite his jumbled personal life, Ross is shown to be a dedicated ER pediatrician, no matter the rules or the consequences. In Season 2, Doug rescued a boy trapped in a flooding storm drain during a rainstorm. His heroic efforts were broadcast live on a local news station, making him a media star. This event helped him earn back his job at County General, because his supervisor in pediatrics originally wasn't going to renew his fellowship due to his repeated disrespect for authority. During Season 2, Doug's father tries to reconcile with Doug, who has difficulty reconnecting with the man who abandoned him and his mother. Ray owns a ritzy hotel in Chicago, and Doug lets his guard down a little, but is disappointed when his father offers to take him to a [[1995β96 Chicago Bulls season|Chicago Bulls]] game and then stands him up. Ross later reveals that he and his mother were abused by his father. Doug later has an affair with Ray's girlfriend, a woman from whom Ray stole money, but ends the relationship when it becomes clear that she has many problems. Initially, Ross is portrayed as a womanizer who dates and leaves many women throughout the course of his time on the show. At one point, he has a one-night-stand with Harper Tracy, a medical student who had been tentatively pursued by Dr. John Carter; this leads to a rift between Ross and Carter for a time. His womanizing days abruptly end after an [[epilepsy|epileptic]] woman he picks up in a bar has a seizure while he drives her home and eventually dies in the ER. Ross learns her name only after her death, which prompts him to stop sleeping around and make an effort to get back together with [[Carol Hathaway]], the head nurse of the ER at County General. The relationship between Doug and Carol, which had previously ended on bad terms prior to the pilot episode, is rekindled in fits and starts over the course of the first five seasons. Doug leaves Chicago for Seattle during season five. In the show's sixth season episode, "Such Sweet Sorrow," Carol flies to Seattle to get back together with Doug. [[Warner Bros. Television]], the studio which produces ''ER'' for [[NBC]], kept secret from the network the return of Dr. Ross. Instead, "Such Sweet Sorrow" was promoted as [[Carol Hathaway]]'s goodbye, with no mention of Ross' appearance. The original version of "Such Sweet Sorrow" that Warner Bros. sent to NBC ended after the scene where viewers see Hathaway on the plane to Seattle. At the eleventh hour, Warner Bros. sent an "edited" version of the episode by messenger to NBC headquarters in New York for broadcast. NBC was unhappy that it was kept in the dark as it could have generated valuable ad revenue if it had aired promos that the episode marked the return of George Clooney. Clooney cited the fans of the show for his reason for making the cameo (he wanted Hathaway's and Ross's characters to get back together, which many fans hoped for). Clooney reportedly only asked to be paid [[Screen Actors Guild#Standardized pay and work conditions|scale]] for the cameo. In the season 15 episode "Old Times", Ross is working as an attending physician at the [[University of Washington Medical Center]] alongside his wife, Carol Hathaway, who is now a transplant coordinator at the hospital. Together, they help a grieving grandmother ([[Susan Sarandon]]) whose grandson was gravely injured in a bicycle accident, convincing her to donate the boy's organs. In the episode, Doug chats with [[Samantha Taggart|Sam]] and [[Neela Rasgotra|Neela]] after finding out that they are from County, asking them whether any of his old colleagues still work there. Doug and Carol are responsible for getting the kidney for Carter and a heart for another County patient, though they never learn the identities of the recipients. ===Career=== In the pilot episode, which takes place on [[St. Patrick's Day]] 1994, Ross is brought into the ER not long before his shift, to be "treated" for drunkenness by his longtime friend, [[Dr. Mark Greene]]. Viewers also see Doug's reaction to the near-death of his ex-girlfriend, nurse [[Carol Hathaway]], after she is brought into the ER as a patient following a suicide attempt. Throughout the next few seasons, Ross is shown to be compassionate, though not always using the best judgment. His love of children is best seen during darker situations, such as when a child is in danger. When [[Peter Benton]] talks about how surgeons deal with emotionally charged cases and ER doctors have it easy, Ross leaves him speechless by describing cases that include a young girl who beat her mother to death, a kid who is going to lose his leg to cancer and another kid who is dying from a life of homelessness. His brashness leads him to confront parents he thinks are irresponsible, and in one instance he publicly assaults a man who had [[child abuse|abused]] his daughter; Ross's counseling in that case just consists of a shrink telling him not to do that again. He is a passionate doctor who puts the welfare of his patients, especially children, above his medical career. In the Season 2 episode "Hell and High Water," Dr. Ross saves a young boy who nearly drowns in a flooded storm drain and commandeers a news helicopter to take him to County General, with much of his attempts to save the child being shown on live TV. This garners him much attention, earns him an award, and saves his job. Ross doesn't handle authority well, even when Mark is his boss. Despite being a [[pediatrician]], in several episodes he's asked to perform medical procedures on adults, usually when the other doctors are busy. In another episode, he tries to do an ultra-rapid [[Drug detoxification|detox]] on a drug-addicted baby without the mother's consent. Hathaway assists, but when Greene and [[Kerry Weaver|Dr. Kerry Weaver]] discover that the procedure is being done in violation of hospital policy and the law, Doug is punished. He is left on [[probation]] for 30 days and is supervised by Drs. Weaver and Greene, who have to co-sign his charts. Doug's attitude toward patient treatment often has consequences for his coworkers and supervisors, who have received reprimands from their superiors for his actions. In Season 4 he vies to be an attending physician for emergency pediatrics. He eventually gets the job, even though Greene and Weaver oppose his promotion because the position isn't necessary and the funds are needed elsewhere. Greene is ultimately happy for Ross, but Weaver is aghast and campaigns against his new position. He resigns in Season 5 following a scandal in which he shows a mother how to bypass the lockouts on a [[Hydromorphone|Dilaudid]] [[Patient-controlled analgesia|PCA]], enabling her to give a lethal dose of medication to her [[terminal illness|terminally ill]] son. Ross had earlier stolen [[Dilaudid]] from a pain-medication study and given it to the mother, only to be discovered by Weaver and Greene, who reprimand him but kept the incident private. The incident prompts the closure of Hathaway's free clinic in the hospital, since it supplied the PCA to this mother, and Ross faces suspension from work and possible criminal charges. A friend of Ross, who is the Chief of Genetics, stands up for him and the charges against him are dropped, but Ross resigns from the hospital and moves to Seattle. When Ross leaves, he and Hathaway are on poor terms until she discovers that she's [[pregnant]] with his twin girls. Her clinic is later re-opened, but she has to report to her former assistant there. Ross was written out of the series because Clooney wished to focus on his expanding film career. He also said that there wasn't any strong story in place for his character after Season 5.{{Citequote|date=January 2009}} He appeared at the end of the penultimate episode of season 6, when Carol leaves Cook County to reunite with Ross in Seattle. He was reportedly asked to return briefly in season 8, to make an appearance in [[Anthony Edwards (actor)|Anthony Edwards]]'s last episode during Greene's funeral, but Clooney declined because he did not want his cameo appearance to overshadow the departure of a beloved character on the show. Clooney returned to ''ER'' for its 15th and final season in 2009 in a story arc beginning with Episode 328, titled "Old Times", with [[Julianna Margulies]] also returning as Hathaway. In the episode, the two are now married and work to help convince a grieving grandmother to donate her grandson's organs. During the process, Doug talks with [[Neela Rasgotra]] and learns that nearly everyone he knows has since departed County with Anspaugh being the only one left. At the end of the episode they receive word of the success of their efforts, unaware that the doctor who got the kidney was their old friend John Carter.
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)